jueves, 14 de julio de 2011

David Baldacci, The Collectors - Camel Club #2

The Collectors (Camel Club, #2)The Collectors by David Baldacci

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


A talented spy-for-hire assassin shoots the Speaker of the House and kills the director of the Library of Congress's Rare Books Room. How could these two crimes be related? One of the members of the Camel Club, Caleb Shaw is thrown in the middle of the case, by nearly falling victim too.
Meanwhile, in Atlantic City, a gifted beautiful con woman assembles a first rate team to pull an incredible and dangerous scam on one of the most dangerous men in the country. She succeeds taking 40 million dollars from this bad man. When she is about to disappear and go under the radar, to prevent being caught by this dangerous man, she reads that her ex-husband, the director of the Rare Books Room has died. So she goes to Washington for his burial, discovering the Camel Club, which informs her that her husband had been murdered.
She and the Camel Club join forces and unravel a spy network, which if continued, would have brought America to its knees.



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David Baldacci, The Camel Club - Camel Club #1

The Camel Club (Camel Club #1)The Camel Club by David Baldacci

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


This is a weird book about conspiracy freaks joined together in a group called The Camel Club. The formula works, these four misfits not only survive against incredible odds, but save their president and country from a plot that would have led to nuclear disaster. The group’s leader has taken the name of "Oliver Stone". One night, while meeting on Roosevelt Island the four club members witness a murder of a Secret Service employee. The two-team hit men see them and persecute them shooting at them in the middle of the Potomac. The Camel Club takes on the offensive trying to find out who the killers are, joining forces with a Secret Service agent. The Americans –thinking the Syrians are behind the plot—get ready to nuke Damascus. Yes, farfetched, but good solid fun reading.



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Robert B. Parker's 6th's Sunny Randall's Novel

Spare ChangeSpare Change by Robert B. Parker

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


Sunny joins forces with her father in order to crack an old case which resurfaces again. Her father was the principal in a series of murders by a criminal dubbed "The Spare Change Killer" 30 years back. The same style murders start happening all over again, the police immediately seek out the cop, now retired, and who headed the original investigation: Phil Randall, Sunny’s father. Phil asks his daughter to help him catch the criminal who eluded him before. Early on the case, Sunny finds her man, but it is just her intuition, lacking solid evidence. Few believe her, but eventually she is able to snare him into a trap, setting herself up to become the next victim, the murderer is eventually killed in a shootout.
This is a good book with a credible plot. This is Parker at his best, and the last of the Sunny Randall’s books.
Fiction, Suspense, Mystery & Detective, Mystery fiction, Women private investigators, Women Sleuths, Thriller, Boston, Randall, Sunny



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Robert B. Parker's 9th Jesse Stone Novel

Split Image (Jesse Stone, #9)Split Image by Robert B. Parker

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


A foot soldier of a local underworld boss is found in the trunk of his car. The local tough guy is enjoying a comfortable "retirement" with his beautiful wife, Rebecca, living next door to another mafia kingpin married with Rebecca’s twin sister. Later, this high-ranking crime figure is found dead on Paradise Beach. These twins are directly involved. Jesse eventually cracks the case, while finally letting go of his cheating and manipulating ex-wife Jenn. Jesse starts a more serious relationship with Sunny Randall.
This is a good book to end the Jesse Stone's series.



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domingo, 5 de junio de 2011

Robert B. Parker's 8th Jesse Stone Novel

Night and Day (Jesse Stone, #8)Night and Day by Robert B. Parker

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


This is a nice easy read. Jesse Stone faces two challenges while at the same time trying to sort out his confusing love-life. The first challenge has to do with a Junior High School Principal, who --under the pretext of proper attire and behavior for her students-- examines their underwear in the locker room. Jesse wants to punish her, but her high-powered attorney husband prevents him. The second and more relevant challenge has to do with a tormented voyeur, dubbed the Nighthawk. This perpetrator escalates from peering through Windows to forcing his victims to undress at gunpoint, then photographing them while naked. Jesse sets a trap and catches the Nighthawk, killing him in a subsequent shootout. Sunny Randall appears, along with Susan Silverman –Spenser's sweetheart— as Sunny's psychiatrist. I liked the book.



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martes, 31 de mayo de 2011

Robert B. Parker's 7th Jesse Stone Novel

Stranger in Paradise (Jesse Stone, #7)Stranger in Paradise by Robert B. Parker

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


An interesting book, which shows Parker’s idea of the self-righteous man: “What feels right it’s probably right, regardless what the law says”. Jesse Stone receives an unexpected visit from Crow, a stone-killer with some very precise rules, like: “I will not kill women or children, but everything else goes!” The last time Jesse saw Crow was on a speed boat with a loot of several million dollars. Now, Crow asks Stone’s help to protect a woman and her daughter from their gangster husband & dad. All the time, Jesse continues with his drinking issues and the never ending relationship with his former wife, Jenn. Jesse kind of forgets his police oath, and ignores murder, for the sake of the greater good. Jesse does not let the law get on the way of justice, the way he understands justice. A good read!



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lunes, 30 de mayo de 2011

Robert B. Parker's 5th's Sunny Randall's Novel

Blue Screen (Sunny Randall, #5)Blue Screen by Robert B. Parker

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


It was a good novel, but again I thought the end needed beefing up.
Buddy Bollen, a C movie producer, who made his fortune from a dot-com deal, hires Sunny Randall to protect his girlfriend, Erin Flint, a sexy starlet who is a legend in her own mind. Sunny takes the job, and soon things get complicated. Erin's assistant, Misty, is found dead in the lavish home they share with sugar daddy Bollen. Erin wants Sunny to take charge of the investigation. She doesn’t trust the local Police. “…I'm not leaving it in the hands of some small-town cow-shit sheriff.” She says to Sunny.
Sunny takes the case and in the process develops a relationship with Jesse Stone, chief of police in Paradise, Massachusetts. Jesse and Sunny strike it on from the beginning, while investigating and detecting, they learn about each other-and themselves. Both have hang-ups about their ex partners.
Trying to find out the Misty's murderer reveals a lot of Erin's past and Buddy’s businesses. Misty was her younger sister. Both became prostitutes when they were at their teens. Erin married her pimp, Gerard Basgall. Buddy Bollen's entertainment business was made up of shady film deals, financed by a mobster out for revenge.
It would have been nice if Parker developed what happened to Buddy, but he reaches the end a little too soon. Sunny and Jesse find out who killed Misty, but they realize it was an accidental death. Erin says she did it, and Gerard says he did. Sunny and Jesse let them go.



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Robert B. Parker's 4th's Sunny Randall's Novel

Melancholy Baby (Sunny Randall Novels)Melancholy Baby by Robert B. Parker

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


I liked the book, but not the ending.
Sarah Markham, a young student believes she is not related to her parents, so she hires private eye Sunny Randall to find out 'who her real parents are'. The girl has resources of her own to pay for her services. "They can't find my birth certificate," "They don't remember which hospital I was born in." she tells Sunny.
Sunny takes the job and ploughs forward, while dealing with her feelings for Richie Burke (her ex-husband) with the help of her shrink (Spenser's psychiatrist girlfriend, Susan Silverman). As she moves forward, people are killed, and she zeroes into a holier-than-thou national celebrity, Lolly Drake, who cannot allow her past to be known or it would kill her career.
It is not one of Spenser’s finest novels. An enjoyable novel, yes, but with a less-than-satisfying finish.





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miércoles, 18 de mayo de 2011

Robert B. Parker's 6th Jesse Stone Novel

High Profile (Jesse Stone, #6)High Profile by Robert B. Parker

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


High Profile is the 6th novel in Robert B. Parker’s Jesse Stone series. As in all the previous books, Jesse deals with crimes, attempts to find the murderer, while dealing with love, infidelity and his twin obsessions: Booze and Jenn (his ex-wife). The ending is bittersweet. On the one hand, Jesse shoots the killer but is unable to indict the mastermind behind it all. On the other, he lets go of his girlfriend Sunny Randall while keeping his unfaithful, lying ex-wife.
The mystery plot is about finding who killed a wealthy radio celebrity and his pregnant assistant. Parallel to the case, his ex-wife Jenn asks his help claiming she had been raped. Jesse then asks his current girlfriend, a private detective, Sunny Randall to protect Jenn. It really sounds complicated, but Parker uses these twists to score points about manhood and marital relationships. Jesse is very similar to young Spenser: Drinkers and lovers. Their reasoning and quick wit are similar, except Spenser is a talker and extrovert, while Jesse is quiet and introverted.
I certainly enjoyed reading the book, and definitely recommend it to all Parker's fans, but I lost some respect for Jesse. There are very few hard but good people in the world that would constantly forgive infidelity and lying from a loved one. There is always: No more! Jesse takes it all from his ex-wife, unwilling to let go, showing the kind of weakness an intelligent, tough but sensible person, would not show all of the time, some of the time perhaps, but not all of the time.



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lunes, 16 de mayo de 2011

Robert B. Parker's 5th Jesse Stone Novel

Sea Change (Jesse Stone, #5)Sea Change by Robert B. Parker

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


As you can see, I am rereading Robert B. Parker's books. This time I read the 5th of the Jesse Stone novels. I read it before in hard cover and I am reading the whole series now in electronic format: Second time around, twice pleasure. The plot and language are short, crisp, straight and sweet. I read it in a day. The history-line is about finding the murderer of a woman found floating in a lagoon. As Jesse blunders forward, he discovers a sex ring and questions his motivations about his ex-wife. It is a good fun reading. I am starting today on the 6th one, "High Profile".

domingo, 15 de mayo de 2011

Robert B. Parker's 39th and last Spenser Novel

Sixkill (Spenser Series #39)Sixkill by Robert B. Parker

My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I just finished reading this highly enjoyable book, the last of the Spenser series. The author died in January 2010. I have to say that this is not Parker at his best, but it is still gripping and interesting. The prose is humorous, yet muscular, crisp and direct. He develops a fascinating new character, Zebulon Sixkill, a modern American Indian version of Jim Thorpe. Sixkill has psychological issues that he, after a confrontation with Spenser, is able to overcome with Spenser’s help.
Parker spends time developing Zebulon Sixkill’s character: his growing up, and his football, bouncer and bodyguard careers. However, the book doesn’t follow through. I think Parker was developing a new character for future novels, but he was taken from us long before his time.
The book was probably completed by somebody else. It falls short of explaining where Sixkill goes after being molded by Spenser into the tough, sensitive man he was destined to be. He becomes an errant knight with a clear warrior’s code, just like Spenser: There is a right way and a wrong way. What is right feels right.
The end also doesn’t feel like Parker's. Having said that, it also sounds like Parker’s last good bye and Spenser's exit line: “But life is mostly metaphor, anyway... I got in my car and drove west.”

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miércoles, 9 de marzo de 2011

Nassim Nicholas Taleb - El Cisne Negro: El impacto de lo altamente improbable

EL CISNE NEGRO por TALEB NASSIM NICHOLAS

Mi calificación: 4 de 5 estrellas


Leí éste libro con gran interés y me dejo un gran sabor de boca. Por muchos siglos se consideró que todos los cisnes eran blancos. Era una ley universal: Si es Cisne es blanco y punto. Sin embargo, por primera vez, los cisnes negros fueron vistos a fines del siglo XVII en Australia por exploradores holandeses. ¡Qué sorpresa! A reescribir la historia: No solamente hay cisnes blancos, también los hay negros.
Dos siglos más tarde, a fines del siglo XIX, Tchaikovsky incluye el concepto del cisne negro en su ballet “El Lago de los Cisnes” representando el mal frente al bien y encarnado por la misma bailarina del cisne blanco. Esta doble caracterización de la princesa Odette en la película “El Cisne Negro” es lo que la hace memorable y misteriosa, la sorpresa de lo desconocido: El Cisne Negro que todos llevamos dentro.
El concepto ha sido ahora usado por el escritor americano de origen libanés Nassim Nicholas Taleb en su libro “El Cisne Negro: el impacto de lo altamente improbable”. El CN en la teoría de Taleb se refiere a la incertidumbre de eventos impredecibles que cambian la dirección del devenir humano.
El libro es provocador y divertido. Taleb logra su propósito: hacernos pensar.
El Autor desarrolla una teoría sobre la influencia del azar en la historia y nuestra incapacidad de ver los eventos impredecibles que nos han cambiado de manera radical, que han alterado nuestra forma de pensar y actuar. Continuamos con una obsesión por construir elegantes modelos que simplifican la realidad para intentar pronosticarla, y manifestamos nuestra incapacidad para predecir grandes acontecimientos cuyos impactos cambian el futuro, el rumbo del presente.
Este esquema del cisne negro se ve definido por tres características: (i) el evento es una rareza, (ii) de consecuencias importantes y (iii) la naturaleza humana busca explicarla después de que se manifestó, para que se vuelva previsible. O sea que resulta imposible calcular su probabilidad, tiene una repercusión desproporcionada y es imaginable en forma retroactiva hasta que sucede.
Son “cisnes negros” el éxito de Google y You Tube, al igual que el derrumbe de la Unión Soviética, el ataque del 11-S del 2001, las actuales revoluciones en los países árabes, el terremoto y el tsunami que devastó a Japón. Estos catastróficos eventos nos sugieren con fuerza lógica que nos debe interesar más lo que no sabemos que lo que pensamos que sabemos. Claro, aunque somos incapaces de predecir el curso de la historia, seguimos como si los hechos imprevistos no fueran significativos.
¿Por qué no podemos ver esos cisnes negros? Bueno, el cerebro humano intenta poner orden donde no lo hay, lo que nos impide pensar correctamente en un mundo complejo. Esto en nada ayuda a la hora de predecir, digamos, una drástica caída de la bolsa de valores.
Tendemos a enfocarnos en un punto con conceptos claros y definidos, que resultan más fáciles de recordar que los difusos y menos tratables. Así, caemos en la trampa de pasar por alto las anomalías a fin de encuadrar la realidad en un enfoque simplista.
¿Cuál es el mensaje principal? Simplemente que, al centrarse el ser humano en lo que tiene sentido, no desarrolla la imaginación necesaria para comprender su entorno físico.
La tesis se basa en la incertidumbre de lo aleatorio, de tal forma que para tomar una decisión debemos concentrarnos en las consecuencias (se pueden conocer), más que dedicar tanto tiempo y esfuerzo a calcular sus probabilidades. Como en el caso de los terremotos, hay que estar preparados ante la brusca aparición de un cisne negro.
El planteamiento es bastante polémico, con elementos que vale la pena conocer y valorar. Cada persona, nos dice el autor, tendrá más control de su vida si decide por sí misma… según su criterio. Y añade que la intención es “… provocar a la gente que se toma demasiado en serio… a aquéllos que no tienen las agallas para decir a veces no sé”.
Taleb es un irreverente, un francotirador que no se cansa de destacar lo descerebrados que somos los economistas, a lo que habría que añadirle: lo cerrados que son los académicos, lo vanidoso que pueden ser los empresarios, y lo peligroso que pueden ser los políticos.
Hay que ser más humildes y menos arrogantes y prepararnos para lo que pensamos que no puede ocurrir… por si llegara a ocurrir.
¿En donde está el Cisne Negro para México?. Probablemente no lo podamos predecir, pero si podríamos empezar a pensar cómo evitarlo o minimizar sus desastrosas consecuencias.
Un Cisne Negro que a todos nos preocupa es el creado por nuestra propia mano. México continua siendo un país de diferencias y profundamente injusto. El contraste más insultante es entre los que tienen mucho y los que están en la miseria.
En gran parte esta injusticia continua por un sistema político más preocupado por alcanzar el poder que por hacer que el país progrese. ¿Cómo es que no se promueven las reformas que necesitamos para crecer más y mejor? ¿Dónde están los políticos, gobernantes, legisladores y jueces patriotas que combaten la corrupción, buscan la eficiencia y ambicionan un mejor México, un México más justo y más seguro, un México que brinde oportunidades a todos sus hijos de alcanzar su potencial como seres humanos?
Por ahí nos puede venir un terrible Cisne Negro que va a enfrentar mexicanos contra mexicanos. Y desgraciadamente ya lo estamos viendo con los cientos de muertos por la delincuencia en San Fernando y otras partes del País.
¿Podemos evitar ese Cisne Negro? Sí, creo que sí se puede evitar. Es una acción colectiva, en particular de nuestros políticos, autoridades, y gobernantes que requieren valor y capacidad de sacrificio para trabajar por algo intangible, el bienestar de la gente, para evitar un evento que consideran poco probable: El rompimiento del orden social…, El Estado Fallido.
Ojala y que despertaran ante la realidad de un Cisne Negro que se nos avecina, que nos está tocando la puerta por su corrupción, su falta de patriotismo, su pésima gestión y por su abuso de poder.

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